993 resultados para water relations
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Irrigação e Drenagem) - FCA
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA
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Pós-graduação em Agronomia (Proteção de Plantas) - FCA
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To understand the effect of summer and winter on the relationships between leaf carbohydrate and photosynthesis in citrus trees growing in subtropical conditions, 'Valencia' orange trees were subjected to external manipulation of their carbohydrate concentration by exposing them to darkness and evaluating the maximal photosynthetic capacity. In addition, the relationships between carbohydrate and photosynthesis in the citrus leaves were studied under natural conditions. Exposing the leaves to dark conditions decreased the carbohydrate concentration and increased photosynthesis in both seasons, which is in accordance with the current model of carbohydrate regulation. Significant negative correlations were found between total non-structural carbohydrates and photosynthesis in both seasons. However, non-reducing sugars were the most important carbohydrate that apparently regulated photosynthesis on a typical summer day, whereas starch was important on a typical winter day. As a novelty, photosynthesis stimulation by carbohydrate consumption was approximately three times higher during the summer, i.e. the growing season. Under subtropical conditions, citrus leaves exhibited relatively high photosynthesis and high carbohydrate levels on the summer day, as well as a high nocturnal consumption of starch and soluble sugars. A positive association was determined between photosynthesis and photoassimilate consumption/exportation, even in leaves showing a high carbohydrate concentration. This paper provides evidence that photosynthesis in citrus leaves is regulated by an increase in sink demand rather than by the absolute carbohydrate concentration in leaves.
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Development within the cleidoic egg of birds and reptiles presents the embryo with the problem of accumulation of wastes from nitrogen metabolism. Ammonia derived from protein catabolism is converted into the less toxic product urea or relatively insoluble uric acid. The pattern of nitrogen excretion of the green iguana, Iguana iguana, was determined during embryonic development using samples from allantoic fluid and from the whole homogenized egg, and in hatchlings and adults using samples of blood plasma. Urea was the major excretory product over the course of embryonic development. It was found in higher concentrations in the allantoic sac, suggesting that there is a mechanism present on the allantoic membrane enabling the concentration of urea. The newly hatched iguana still produced urea while adults produced uric acid. The time course of this shift in the type of nitrogen waste was not determined but the change is likely to be related to the water relations associated with the terrestrial habit of the adult. The green iguana produces parchment-shelled eggs that double in mass during incubation due to water absorption: the eggs also accumulate 0.02 mM of urea, representing 82% of the total measured nitrogenous residues that accumulate inside the allantois. The increase in egg mass and urea concentration became significant after 55 days of incubation then were unchanged until hatching. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Drought perturbation driven by the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a principal stochastic variable determining the dynamics of lowland rain forest in S.E. Asia. Mortality, recruitment and stem growth rates at Danum in Sabah (Malaysian Borneo) were recorded in two 4-ha plots (trees ≥ 10 cm gbh) for two periods, 1986–1996 and 1996–2001. Mortality and growth were also recorded in a sample of subplots for small trees (10 to <50 cm gbh) in two sub-periods, 1996–1999 and 1999–2001. Dynamics variables were employed to build indices of drought response for each of the 34 most abundant plot-level species (22 at the subplot level), these being interval-weighted percentage changes between periods and sub-periods. A significant yet complex effect of the strong 1997/1998 drought at the forest community level was shown by randomization procedures followed by multiple hypothesis testing. Despite a general resistance of the forest to drought, large and significant differences in short-term responses were apparent for several species. Using a diagrammatic form of stability analysis, different species showed immediate or lagged effects, high or low degrees of resilience or even oscillatory dynamics. In the context of the local topographic gradient, species’ responses define the newly termed perturbation response niche. The largest responses, particularly for recruitment and growth, were among the small trees, many of which are members of understorey taxa. The results bring with them a novel approach to understanding community dynamics: the kaleidoscopic complexity of idiosyncratic responses to stochastic perturbations suggests that plurality, rather than neutrality, of responses may be essential to understanding these tropical forests. The basis to the various responses lies with the mechanisms of tree-soil water relations which are physiologically predictable: the timing and intensity of the next drought, however, is not. To date, environmental stochasticity has been insufficiently incorporated into models of tropical forest dynamics, a step that might considerably improve the reality of theories about these globally important ecosystems.
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The water relations of two tree species in the Euphorbiaceae were compared to test in part a hypothesis that the forest understorey plays an integral role in drought response. At Danum, Sabah, the relatively common species Dimorphocalyx muricatus is associated with ridges whilst another species, Mallotus wrayi, occurs widely both on ridges and lower slopes. Sets of subplots within two 4 -ha permanent plots in this lowland dipterocarp rain forest, were positioned on ridges and lower slopes. Soil water potentials were recorded in 1995-1997, and leaf water potentials were measured on six occasions. Soil water potentials on the ridges (-0.047 MPa) were significantly lower than on the lower slopes (-0.012 MPa), but during the driest period in May 1997 they fell to similarly low levels on both sites (-0.53 MPa). A weighted 40-day accumulated rainfall index was developed to model the soil water potentials. At dry times, D. muricatus (ridge) had significantly higher pre-dawn (-0.21 v. -0.57 MPa) and mid-day (-0.59 v. -1.77 MPa) leaf water potentials than M. wrayi (mean of ridge and lower slope). Leaf osmotic potentials of M. wrayi on the ridges were lower (-1.63 MPa) than on lower slopes (-1.09 MPa), with those for D. muricatus being intermediate (-1.29 MPa): both species adjusted osmotically between wet and dry times. D. muricatus trees were more deeply rooted than M. wrayi trees (97 v. 70 cm). M. wrayi trees had greater lateral root cross-sectional areas than D. muricatus trees although a greater proportion of this sectional area for D. muricatus was further down the soil profile. D. muricatus appeared to maintain relatively high water potentials during dry periods because of its access to deeper water supplies and thus it largely avoided drought effects, but M. wrayi seemed to be more affected yet tolerant of drought and was more plastic in its response. The interaction between water availability and topography determines these species' distributions and provides insights into how rain forests can withstand occasional strong droughts.
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Vinal (Prosopis ruscifolia G.) es una especie de importancia forestal, nativa de la Región Fitogeográfica del Chaco Occidental, altamente tolerante al estrés salino. El objetivo de este trabajo fue poner a prueba la hipótesis de que la suplementación con CaSO4 disminuye la concentración de iones tóxicos en plántulas de vinal, e incrementa la concentración de prolina, permitiendo un ajuste osmótico. Las plántulas se cultivaron en solución nutritiva de Hoagland al 25%, con o sin la adición de 0,4 mol L-1 de NaCl, y con o sin suplementación de 5 ó 10 mmol L-1 de CaSO4. Se determinó la materia seca, composición mineral, contenido relativo de agua y concentraciones de prolina y azúcares solubles. Se utilizó un diseño experimental completamente aleatorizado con cinco repeticiones, y los resultados se analizaron con ANOVA y test de Tukey. Los resultados obtenidos en este trabajo confirman el rol protector del Ca+2, a través de la manutención de las concentraciones de Ca+2, K+ y Mg+2 en los tejidos, la inhibición de la absorción de Na+ y el ajuste osmótico mediante la síntesis de solutos osmocompatibles.
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El uso de portainjertos en la vid se ha difundido por su resistencia a filoxera y nemátodos, pero también por su tolerancia a condiciones adversas del suelo. Por otro lado, los portainjertos modifican las relaciones fuente-destino, influyendo en el comportamiento vegetativo y reproductivo de las plantas y en la composición de la uva, lo cuál puede ser utilizado como una herramienta de manejo agronómico. A fin de evaluar si existe un comportamiento diferencial de los portainjertos en cuanto a expresión vegetativa, vigor, rendimiento y composición de la uva, y explicar dichas diferencias en términos de exploración radical, relaciones hídricas, asimilación de carbono, eficiencia en el uso del agua y partición de asimilados se realizó un ensa-yo a campo de cv. Malbec sobre seis portainjertos (3309 C, 1103 P, 140 Ru, SO4, Harmony y Cereza) y a pie franco. Los portainjertos 140 Ru, 1103 P y SO4 tuvieron una mayor tendencia a la producción de uva (mayor Índice de Ravaz), y Franco, Cereza y 3309 C a vegetar, mostrando Harmony una situación intermedia. Las ba-yas sobre el pie Cereza tuvieron un mayor peso (1,96 g) que sobre Harmony (1,75 g). No se encontraron diferencias en los polifenoles de las bayas entre portainjertos. La fotosíntesis de la planta entera (Amax) de Franco, 1103 P y SO4 fue mayor que la de Harmony. La conductancia hidráulica foliar específica (kL) de Harmony fue me-nor que la de Cereza, y su conductancia hidráulica (kH) fue menor que la de Franco, Cereza y SO4. El número de raíces totales de 140 Ru fue mayor que el de 1103 P, SO4 y Harmony. El portainjerto 140 Ru se destacó por privilegiar el desarrollo radi-cal y reproductivo sobre el vegetativo, y por su mayor eficiencia en el uso del agua (EUA). Las diferencias entre portainjertos pueden ser explicadas en parte por dife-rencias en la kL que a su vez incide en el estado hídrico de las plantas (ΨL). De ma-nera que cuando la kL es más baja, el ΨL es menor (i.e., Harmony), y cuando la kL es más alta, el ΨL es mayor (i.e., Franco y Cereza). Mayores ΨL se asocian con mayores superficies foliares.
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La fotosíntesis es el proceso biológico que permite la producción primaria y, por tanto, la vida en nuestro planeta. La tasa fotosintética viene determinada por la ‘maquinaria’ bioquímica y las resistencias difusivas al paso del CO2 desde la atmósfera hasta su fijación en el interior de los cloroplastos. Históricamente la mayor resistencia difusiva se ha atribuido al cierre estomático, sin embargo ahora sabemos, debido a las mejoras en las técnicas experimentales, que existe también una resistencia grande que se opone a la difusión del CO2 desde los espacios intercelulares a los lugares de carboxilación. Esta resistencia, llamada normalmente por su inversa: la conductancia del mesófilo (gm), puede ser igual o incluso superior a la resistencia debida por el cierre estomático. En la presente tesis doctoral he caracterizado la limitación que ejerce la resistencia del mesófilo a la fijación de CO2 en diversas especies forestales y en distintos momentos de su ciclo biológico. En la fase de regenerado, hemos estudiado tres situaciones ambientales relevantes en el mayor éxito de su supervivencia, que son: el déficit hídrico, su interacción con la irradiancia y el paso del crecimiento en la sombra a mayor irradiancia, como puede suceder tras la apertura de un hueco en el dosel forestal. En la fase de arbolado adulto se ha caracterizado el estado hídrico y el intercambio gaseoso en hojas desarrolladas a distinta irradiancia dentro del dosel vegetal durante tres años contrastados en pluviometría. Para cada tipo de estudio se han empleado las técnicas ecofisiológicas más pertinentes para evaluar el estado hídrico y el intercambio gaseoso. Por su complejidad y la falta de un método que permita su cuantificación directa, la gm ha sido evaluada por los métodos más usados, que son: la discriminación isotópica del carbono 13, el método de la J variable, el método de la J constante y el método de la curvatura. Los resultados más significativos permiten concluir que la limitación relativa a la fotosíntesis por la conductancia estomática, del mesófilo y bioquímica es dependiente de la localización de la hoja en el dosel forestal. Por primera vez se ha documentado que bajo estrés hídrico las hojas desarrolladas a la sombra estuvieron más limitadas por una reducción en la gm, mientras que las hojas desarrolladas a pleno sol estuvieron más limitadas por reducción mayor de la conductancia estomática (gsw). Encontramos buena conexión entre el aparato fotosintético foliar y el sistema hídrico debido al alto grado de correlación entre la conductancia hidráulica foliar aparente y la concentración de CO2 en los cloroplastos en distintas especies forestales. Además, hemos mostrado diferentes pautas de regulación del intercambio gaseoso según las particularidades ecológicas de las especies estudiadas. Tanto en brinzales crecidos de forma natural y en el arbolado adulto como en plántulas cultivadas en el invernadero la ontogenia afectó a las limitaciones de la fotosíntesis producidas por estrés hídrico, resultando que las limitaciones estomáticas fueron dominantes en hojas más jóvenes mientras que las no estomáticas en hojas más maduras. La puesta en luz supuso un gran descenso en la gm durante los días siguientes a la transferencia, siendo este efecto mayor según el grado de sombreo previo en el que se han desarrollado las hojas. La aclimatación de las hojas a la alta irradiancia estuvo ligada a las modificaciones anatómicas foliares y al estado de desarrollo de la hoja. El ratio entre la gm/gsw determinó la mayor eficiencia en el uso del agua y un menor estado oxidativo durante la fase de estrés hídrico y su posterior rehidratación, lo cual sugiere el uso de este ratio en los programas de mejora genética frente al estrés hídrico. Debido a que la mayoría de modelos de estimación de la producción primaria bruta (GPP) de un ecosistema no incluye la gm, los mismos están incurriendo en una sobreestimación del GPP particularmente bajo condiciones de estrés hídrico, porque más de la mitad de la reducción en fotosíntesis en hojas desarrolladas a la sombra se debe a la reducción en gm. Finalmente se presenta un análisis de la importancia en las estimas de la gm bajo estrés hídrico de la refijación del CO2 emitido en la mitocondria a consecuencia de la fotorrespiración y la respiración mitocondrial en luz. ABSTRACT Photosynthesis is the biological process that supports primary production and, therefore, life on our planet. Rates of photosynthesis are determined by biochemical “machinery” and the diffusive resistance to the transfer of CO2 from the atmosphere to the place of fixation within the chloroplasts. Historically the largest diffusive resistance was attributed to the stomata, although we now know via improvements in experimental techniques that there is also a large resistance from sub-stomatal cavities to sites of carboxylation. This resistance, commonly quantified as mesophyll conductance (gm), can be as large or even larger than that due to stomatal resistance. In the present PhD I have characterized the limitation exerted by the mesophyll resistance to CO2 fixation in different forest species at different stages of their life cycle. In seedlings, we studied three environmental conditions that affect plant fitness, namely, water deficit, the interaction of water deficit with irradiance, and the transfer of plants grown in the shade to higher irradiance as can occur when a gap opens in the forest canopy. At the stage of mature trees we characterized water status and gas exchange in leaves developed at different irradiance within the canopy over the course of three years that had contrasting rainfall. For each study we used the most relevant ecophysiological techniques to quantify water relations and gas exchange. Due to its complexity and the lack of a method that allows direct quantification, gm was estimated by the most commonly used methods which are: carbon isotope discrimination, the J-variable, constant J and the curvature method The most significant results suggest that the relative limitation of photosynthesis by stomata, mesophyll and biochemistry depending on the position of the leaf within the canopy. For the first time it was documented that under water stress shaded leaves were more limited by a reduction in gm, while the sun-adapted leaves were more limited by stomatal conductance (gsw). The connection between leaf photosynthetic apparatus and the hydraulic system was shown by the good correlations found between the apparent leaf hydraulic conductance and the CO2 concentration in the chloroplasts in shade- and sun-adapted leaves of several tree species. In addition, we have revealed different patterns of gas exchange regulation according to the functional ecology of the species studied. In field grown trees and greenhouse-grown seedlings ontogeny affected limitations of photosynthesis due to water stress with stomatal limitations dominating in young leaves and nonstomatal limitations in older leaves. The transfer to high light resulted in major decrease of gm during the days following the transfer and this effect was greater as higher was the shade which leaves were developed. Acclimation to high light was linked to the leaf anatomical changes and the state of leaf development. The ratio between the gm/gsw determined the greater efficiency in water use and reduced the oxidative stress during the water stress and subsequent rehydration, suggesting the use of this ratio in breeding programs aiming to increase avoidance of water stress. Because most models to estimate gross primary production (GPP) of an ecosystem do not include gm, they are incurring an overestimation of GPP particularly under conditions of water stress because more than half of An decrease in shade-developed leaves may be due to reduction in gm. Finally, we present an analysis of the importance of how estimates of gm under water stress are affected by the refixation of CO2 that is emitted from mitochondria via photorespiration and mitochondrial respiration in light.
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We studied aquaporins in maize (Zea mays), an important crop in which numerous studies on plant water relations have been carried out. A maize cDNA, ZmTIP1, was isolated by reverse transcription-coupled PCR using conserved motifs from plant aquaporins. The derived amino acid sequence of ZmTIP1 shows 76% sequence identity with the tonoplast aquaporin γ-TIP (tonoplast intrinsic protein) from Arabidopsis. Expression of ZmTIP1 in Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that it increased the osmotic water permeability of oocytes 5-fold; this water transport was inhibited by mercuric chloride. A cross-reacting antiserum made against bean α-TIP was used for immunocytochemical localization of ZmTIP1. These results indicate that this and/or other aquaporins is abundantly present in the small vacuoles of meristematic cells. Northern analysis demonstrated that ZmTIP1 is expressed in all plant organs. In situ hybridization showed a high ZmTIP1 expression in meristems and zones of cell enlargement: tips of primary and lateral roots, leaf primordia, and male and female inflorescence meristems. The high ZmTIP1 expression in meristems and expanding cells suggests that ZmTIP1 is needed (a) for vacuole biogenesis and (b) to support the rapid influx of water into vacuoles during cell expansion.
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Responses of stomatal conductance (g(s)) and net photosynthesis (A) to changes in soil water availability, photosynthetic photon flux density (Q), air temperature (1) and leaf-to-air vapour pressure deficit (D) were investigated in 4-year-old trees of a dry inland provenance of Eucalyptus argophloia Blakely, and two dry inland provenances (Coominglah and Hungry Hills) and a humid coastal provenance (Wolvi) of Eucalyptus cloeziana F. Muell. between April 2001 and April 2002 in southeast Queensland, Australia. There were minimal differences in A, g, and water relations variables among the coastal and inland provenances of E. cloeziana but large differences between E. argophloia and E. cloeziana. E. argophloia and to a lesser extent the Hungry Hills (inland) provenance of E. cloeziana maintained relatively higher pre-dawn water potential (psi(pd)) during the dry season suggesting possible access to water at depth. Simple phenomenological models of stomatal conductance as a function of Q, T and D explained 60% of variation in gs in E. cloeziana and more than 75% in E. argophloia, when seasonal effect was incorporated in the model. A Ball-Berry model for net photosynthesis explained between 70 and 80% of observed variation in A in both species. These results have implications in matching the dry and humid provenances of E. cloeziana and E. argophloia to suitable sites in subtropical environments. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Background Field observations and glasshouse studies have suggested links between boron (B)-deficiency and leaf damage induced by low temperature in crop plants, but causal relationships between these two stresses at physiological, biochemical and molecular levels have yet to be explored. Limited evidence at the whole-plant level suggests that chilling temperature in the root zone restricts B uptake capacity and/or B distribution/utilization efficiency in the shoot, but the nature of this interaction depends on chilling tolerance of species concerned, the mode of low temperature treatment (abrupt versus gradual temperature decline) and growth conditions (e.g. photon flux density and relative humidity) that may exacerbate chilling stress. Scope This review explores roles of B nutrition in chilling tolerance of continual root or transient shoot chills in crop species adapted to warm season conditions. It reviews current research on combined effects of chilling temperature (ranging from > 0 to 20 degrees C) and B deficiency on growth and B nutrition responses in crop species differing in chilling tolerance. Conclusion For subtropical/tropical species (e.g. cucumber, cassava, sunflower), root chilling at 10-17 degrees C decreases B uptake efficiency and B utilization in the shoot and increases the shoot : root ratio, but chilling-tolerant temperate species (e.g. oilseed rape, wheat) require much lower root chill temperatures (2-5 degrees C) to achieve the same responses. Boron deficiency exacerbates chilling injuries in leaf tissues, particularly under high photon flux density. Suggested mechanisms for B x chilling interactions in plants are: (a) chilling-induced reduction in plasmalemma hydraulic conductivity, membrane fluidity, water channel activity and root pressure, which contribute to the decrease in root hydraulic conductance, water uptake and associated B uptake; (b) chilling-induced stomatal dysfunction affecting B transport from root to shoot and B partitioning in the shoot; and (c) B deficiency induced sensitivity to photo-oxidative damage in leaf cells. However, specific evidence for each of the mechanisms is still lacking. Impacts of B status on chilling tolerance in crop species have important implications for the management of B supply during sensitive stages of growth, such as early growth after planting and early reproductive development, both of which can coincide with the occurrence of chilling temperatures in the field.